Quick Case: Lumbar Pain, Limited Flexion, and "Tight" Hamstrings

I wanted to share some quick ways to restore limited toe touch with the perception of lumbar pain and "tight" hamstrings."

The case was a fit 45 yo female who presented with left lumbar pain, radiating to left posterior thigh. In terms of Lower Quarter Clinical Practice Patterns, you should be looking forLimitations/pain in

lumbar sidegliding in standing to the involved side

lumbar extension in standing deviates away from the involved side

hip flexion ASLR that improves with passive testing on the involved side

hip IR on the involved side

In most cases, if either lumbar movement test is asymmetrical or painful, you start with repeated motion strategies in the lumbar spine and direct your manual therapies there if needed. In the case I saw today, her lumbar SGIS was symmetrical and extension was full and pain free.

From a variability standpoint, she has been a patient in the past, and knows enough to try SGIS for unilateral lumbar/hip pain, and to perform REIS prophylactically. These movements would no longer be perceived as novel by the CNS and would not change perception of the movement or area under threat.

Her ASLR and passive hip flexion were both moderately painful and limited on the left, and FN on the right. Hip IR was also limited/painful actively and passively on the involved side. The interventions I chose were

resistance was provided 2-3 seconds and upon relaxation, the hip was further passively moved into flexion

this was repeated 3-4 reps until full passive hip flexion was improved

this was reinforced with core activated ASLR

After restoring full ASLR, standing toe touch was tested and was now full and pain free. She was instructed on passive hip flexion, held or repeated loading to inhibit her hip flexors and ASLR to reinforce the new motion actively.

Lumbar pain and "hamstring tightness" were abolished in walking and standing after this. Just in case, she was instructed on performing REIS as in the past, this was her directional preference.

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